Since their launch in 2009 by Google’s future CEO Sundar Pichai, Chromebooks have traditionally been seen as a tool for teachers and students in the classroom, with a massive market share inside education. I’ve been testing three Chromebooks over the past month across a range of prices: Google’s $999 Pixelbook, Samsung’s $599 Chromebook Pro, and Acer’s $250 Chromebook 11. My Bluetooth headphones connected effortlessly, and if they die there’s a headphone jack, as well as two USB-C ports, one regular USB port, and an SD card slot. I’m playing music from the Android app for Spotify, as I type into my text editor of choice, Notion, running in a web page. It’s not been too much of a jump, as shocking as that might sound. I’m now doing the same things I would be doing on my Mac, but on a humble Acer Chromebook 11. Quartz/ Dave Gershgorn The apps have lost.
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